| 1. |
Access Commerce Spices Up North American CRM Fray (3 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Jul 5, 2000 Abstract : In May, Access Commerce, a French CRM vendor, announced the opening of its first USA office in San Diego, California. During Explore 2000, QAD’s annual user conference, Access Commerce announced the release of eCameleon for MFG/PRO.
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| 2. |
EAI Vendor Extricity Teams with Moai to Automate E-Commerce Systems (3 Pages)
by M. Reed
May 11, 2000 Abstract : Enterprise Application Integration vendor Extricity announced a business-to-business alliance with Moai Technologies, Inc., to provide a full-range of automated e-commerce systems. Moaiメs Dynamic Commerce Markup Language (DCML) is an XML-standard compliant language for dynamic commerce markets, and combined with Extricityメs B2B platform, the vendors hope to better integrate e-commerce business processes.
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| 3. |
AspenTech Launches e-Business InitiativeFinally (3 Pages)
by Steve McVey
Nov 17, 1999 Abstract : Aspen Technology recently announced its e-commerce initiative, Aspen e-Business, which is the first in a planned series of business-to-business e-commerce applications. As part of the initiative, AspenTech will partner with business-to-business application vendor Extricity Software, Inc. to deliver e-commerce solutions. Though Aspen lags behind other enterprise application software vendors in e-commerce offerings, recent business restructuring efforts and its hold on the process manufacturing segment may lead to success.
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| 4. |
GXS Acquires HAHT Commerce for More Synchronized Retail B2B Data Part One: Event Summary (4 Pages)
by P.J. Jakovljevic
Mar 9, 2004 Abstract : GXS, a business to business e-commerce pioneer, announced its acquisition of channel management specialist HAHT Commerce. However, despite a good complementary fit, enlarged customer base, and improved cross-selling opportunity (especially to existing customers in the retail sector), some challenges will have to be overcome and a more detailed strategy will have to be fleshed out.
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| 5. |
The Hidden Role of Data Quality in E-Commerce Success (4 Pages)
by Mark E. Atkins
Jan 4, 2003 Abstract : Successful e-commerce relies on intelligible, trustworthy content. To achieve this, companies need a complete solution at their back- and front-ends, so they can harness and leverage their data and maximize the return on their e-commerce investment.
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| 6. |
The Hidden Role of Data Quality in E-Commerce Success (4 Pages)
by Mark E. Atkins
Sep 12, 2002 Abstract : Successful e-commerce relies on intelligible, trustworthy content. To achieve this, companies need a complete solution at their back- and front-ends, so they can harness and leverage their data and maximize the return on their e-commerce investment.
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| 7. |
The Yin and Yang of Electronic Commerce (5 Pages)
by D. Geller
Jun 8, 2002 Abstract : This note identifies the major corporate functions that engage in E-Commerce activities and the kinds of information flows that result from E-Commerce activities.
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| 8. |
'Collaborative Commerce': ERP, CRM, e-Proc, and SCM Unite! A Series Study: Oracle (8 Pages)
by Randy Garland
Nov 22, 2001 Abstract : There are two ways to build enterprise application solutions: link together disparate, best-of-breed solutions, in which vendors embrace open architectures and inter-application messaging protocols, or find a one-stop-shop with all the software, functionality, and interoperability one could ever ask for. Oracle insists the latter is the best way, and it is their way. But is it best for Collaborative-Commerce? Is their vision of C-Commerce and interoperability yours as well?
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| 9. |
'Collaborative Commerce': ERP, CRM, e-Proc, and SCM Unite! A Series Study: Oracle (8 Pages)
by Randy Garland
Sep 26, 2001 Abstract : There are two ways to build enterprise application solutions: link together disparate, best-of-breed solutions, in which vendors embrace open architectures and inter-application messaging protocols, or find a one-stop-shop with all the software, functionality, and interoperability one could ever ask for. Oracle insists the latter is the best way, and it is their way. But is it best for Collaborative-Commerce? Is their vision of C-Commerce and interoperability yours as well?
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